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Listing all posts with label laundry line. Show all posts.
  1. The Hills Extenda 4 is the next generation of retractable laundry line from Hills for couples living in the US, with 4 lines that extend out to a distance of 6.5m and retract out of sight when not required or needed.

    Check out this retractable clothesline for couples here

  2. I found a recent excellent article in the BBC News magazine by Tom Geoghegan, that discussed the whole issue were are facing here in the US with clothes line bans.

    Here is a brief piece of the article which can be found in full at http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/magazine-11417677

    laundry on the clothes line

    For decades, the clothes line has had an image problem in the US but, ahead of a rally to highlight the benefits of natural drying, is it about to be reclaimed?

    There is a new protest movement sweeping the US and at its heart are two sticks and a piece of string.

    Upon the humble clothes line, a battle line has been drawn that embodies a uniquely American clash of ideas about class, liberty and the environment.

    Rules imposed by community associations and landlords forbid tens of millions of home owners to dry their washing outside because, they say, it's unsightly and even lowers property prices.

    But a number of clothes line rebels have risked legal action by disobeying these rules, saying it is the duty of Americans to reduce their carbon footprint and leave their energy-hungry tumble dryers idle.

    This Sunday their supporters will make their feelings known by holding a rally in Concord, New Hampshire to promote line drying.

    These unlikely dissenters come in all ages and from all backgrounds. After moving to Witney Ridge in Pennsylvania nearly three years ago, Deborah Brensinger, a 55-year-old nurse, immediately began hanging her clothes in her back yard.

    "Our government is trying to encourage working with the environment and doing things to cut down electricity, yet here's something totally free.

    "I get to see my neighbours, it's clean and it smells good. It's a contemplative practice. I don't rush it, I enjoy it. It relieves stress. You can do it leisurely at your own pace, in a world that's so fast-paced."

    What are your thoughts on clothes line bans here in the US? It pretty clear we love clothes lines, however we just cant understand why they need to be banned and why so many HOA are on board.  

  3. Below is a brief excert and trailer for a new film that is being put together around drying laundry and clothes with a clothesline...please take the time to watch the trailer and leave a comment as it certainly makes a compelling  statement. 

    "A conflict is raging in the US. Protests, political movements and murder have taken place in the name of an unlikely ideal: clotheslines.

    Tens of millions of individuals across Northern America are banned from outdoor line drying by the very communities they live in, forcing them to turn to the dryer. Homeowners who break the rules are fined, sued and even foreclosed on. This ban is not only infringing on civil rights, it's contributing to the environmental and energy crisis.

    The dryer is responsible for 6% of the average household's energy bill and it costs residential ratepayers in the US an estimated $5 billion annually. Corporate America has sold the dryer and the consumption of electricity as a status symbol, and now they have their eyes on a much bigger prize - the world."

    Our future is hanging on the line.

     

    for more info on this movie you can checkout their website at http://www.dryingforfreedom.com/